Saturday, March 6, 2021

This Is What It Means If You Have No Vaccine Side Effects, Doctors Say

 

 

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This Is What It Means If You Have No Vaccine Side Effects, Doctors Say

WITH SO MUCH SIDE EFFECT TALK, YOU MAY BE WONDERING WHAT IT MEANS IF YOU GET YOUR SHOT SCOT-FREE.

Ever since December when news broke that two COVID-19 vaccines were nearing emergency use authorization, we’ve all been warned to expect possible side effects from our shots as our body builds immunity against the novel coronavirus. However, with everyone braced for certain common symptoms, those patients who have been vaccinated but have not experienced any side effects may be wondering if their lack of a reaction is cause for concern. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) official vaccine guidance notes that "some people have no side effects." But what does it mean exactly if your shot leaves you side effect free? Read on to find out, and for more on what to do post-shot, check out The CDC Says Don't Take This After Your Vaccine Without a Doctor's OK.

Fighting Flu Frugally

Side effects are the result of your body building immunity.

Doctor Giving COVID-19 Vaccination Shot To Her Patient
ilkercelik / iStock

Vaccines work by introducing your immune system to a new infection and priming it to recognize and fight off that disease if you were to later encounter it for real. Both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines contain a strand of genetic material called mRNA. When this enters your cells, it triggers them to make a piece of the spike protein that is on the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. While it doesn’t harm your body or cause COVID-19 infection, it does trigger your immune system to think that it’s under attack and to mount a response to fight it off. Your healthy cells then overwhelm those which have replicated the spike protein, and throughout this exchange, antibodies specific for COVID-19 are generated and leave you with future protection.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine meanwhile was created using a non-replicating adenoviral vector, where a tiny piece of genetic material from COVID is inserted into a weakened version of the common cold virus, which was altered so it can enter cells but not replicate inside of them, the pharmaceutical company explains. This again teaches your immune system to make antibodies against the coronavirus, so that if you were to come in contact with the real virus later on, you will then be able to fight it off more efficiently. And for more COVID news delivered right to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter.

But that doesn't mean that if you don't have side effects, you don't have immunity.

Doctor in protective face mask wearing surgical gloves injecting vaccine to a patient in medical lab.
goc / iStock

With so much reassurance being offered to the American public that vaccine side effects are nothing to be concerned about, those without them may be worried that a lack of side effects indicates the vaccine didn't work as effectively. But doctors say that's not the case. “If you get this vaccine and you don’t experience any side effects, it doesn’t mean that it’s not initiating a strong immune response,” explained Wendell Hoffman, MD, an infectious disease specialist at Sanford Health, in an article for the health care company's website.

Leana Wen, MD, a practicing physician and op-ed columnist for The Washington Post, assured readers, "People respond differently to vaccines. Some experience side effects—this is normal and is a sign that the body is generating an immune response that will help to fight COVID-19 if exposed in the future. Some others don't have side effects. That's normal too, and there's no reason to believe that the vaccine is less effective for them." And for more on the newest side effects being discussed, check out The CDC Just Warned of 3 New Vaccine Side Effects.

About half of people don't have any vaccine side effects.

A COVID-19 vaccination record card with a vile of vaccine and a syringe.
iStock

While much information has focused on the side effects people can expect after vaccination, those without sore arms or aches have expressed concern over their lack of side effects. On the Cleveland Clinic's website, one person wrote in and asked, "If you don’t experience any symptoms, does that mean the vaccine, or your immune system, isn’t working?"

In response, Thaddeus Stappenbeck, MD, Chairman of the Department of Inflammation and Immunity at Cleveland Clinic’s Lerner Research Institute, explained, “When you actually look at the statistics from the trials, most people didn’t have side effects. A little over 50 percent didn’t experience any side effects at all and remember, they were still 94 percent protected after receiving the vaccine. So, you don’t need to worry if you don’t have any symptoms after your COVID-19 vaccinations.”

Stappenbeck added that he hoped further investigations would reveal why people respond differently to the virus. “With so many people getting vaccinated, the medical community is very interested in why some people experience all the symptoms while others don’t,” he wrote. “They’re still in the process of sorting this all out. Right now, we don’t understand it." But, he added, the "main vaccines that have been approved for emergency use are effective whether or not you’ve developed side effects—and you don’t have to feel terrible to prove that you’re protected from COVID-19.” And for more on a strange reaction that's cropped up, check out Doctors Want You to "Be Prepared" for This Delayed Vaccine Side Effect.

Side effects are only a concern if they get worse.

A woman sitting at a laptop holding her head and looking fatigued, perhaps suffering from long COVID
Shutterstock

If you do have side effects, the CDC says they'll come in two varieties. Firstly, the localized reaction to the injection itself, in the form of pain, redness, and swelling. And secondly, a body-wide response, most commonly presenting as fever, chills, tiredness, headache, muscle aches, or nausea. “In most cases, discomfort from fever or pain is normal,” they write. However, they say there are two situations in which you should call your doctor: "If the redness or tenderness where you got the shot gets worse after 24 hours," or, "If your side effects are worrying you or do not seem to be going away after a few days." And for the side effects most common with the newest vaccine in particular, check out These Are the Side Effects of the New Johnson & Johnson Vaccine, FDA Says.

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